The year is 1968, the place: Bethel, Minnesota on the Great Northern line from the Twin
Cities north to the port cities of Duluth and Superior. Mail messenger Phil Fox is hanging a catcher
pouch of outbound mail on the crane.


Soon the southbound Badger, Train #23 from Duluth will fly by at 70 MPH and snag the pouch with a hook mounted in the Railway Post Office open car door. The clerk manning the hook will simultaneously toss a sack on inbound mail. The arms on the mail crane will collapse as a safety measure for other train crewman like the conductor standing in the vestibule.


This scene was repeated daily, hundreds of times on 1500 RPO routes across the country. The Railway Mail Service once employed 30,000 men in 4,000 RPO cars. These men sorted mail enroute, a service that many times included dispatching letters in pouches at stations that were snagged on the fly earlier in the same run.


It all came to an end on June 30, 1977 when the “New York & Washington,” in both directions, made their last runs. As
a sole survivor, this RPO run saw all the others “twilight” with the inception of AMTRAK in 1971. RPOs were victims of airlifting first class mail and the use of trucks.


A little editorial comment: When the RPOs were active, you could mail a letter in Seattle and have it delivered to a home in the Twin Cities on the 3rd day. Even with 500MPH jets today,?? forget it.


Photos by Don L.Hofsommer as seen in Classic Trains magazine, Fall 2006


Professor Hofsommer is a noted railfan/author, Submitted by Gary Ostlund